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Building better workplaces through compliance, culture, connection
Got Workplace Silos? Develop Your Leadership Skills
on Friday, August 27, 2021
Silos may be a natural and predictable phenomenon with work groups. They are certainly common. Are they always a bad thing? Probably not. When speaking of silos, typically workplaces are referring to the “I-am-only-interested-in-my-group” dynamics that occur between day shift and swing shift, or between sales and production, between administration and front-line service. Information isn’t shared, resources are hoarded, barriers are erected and business suffers.
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Supervisor Development—High Return on Investment for Those Willing to Dig In
The Communication Conundrum
on Monday, March 15, 2021
For years we have been teaching supervisors, managers and team leaders to over-communicate to their teams. We would encourage leaders to articulate with effective repetition our vision, rallying cries, day-to-day policy and procedure updates, team priorities, staffing changes.
Creating Necessity and Enjoying Urgency
on Monday, June 15, 2020
We shouldn’t create “false urgency,” employees see through that quickly. However, strong teams have a bias for action, for diving in, for making progress and mistakes that move us ahead.
Managing Through Change and Disruption
on Monday, May 18, 2020
As consultants to workplaces across the Northwest, Cascade Employers Association has been helping workplaces adjust to change for decades.
COVID Advice Syndrome
on Monday, April 20, 2020
I don’t know about you, but in the past few weeks I have received about a ton and a half of advice about how to cope with all the change and stressors that have hit us recently. To be honest, I am also guilty of adding to the advice pile.
Are You Using Collaboration Effectively?
on Monday, April 13, 2020
Before you say you believe in someone, before you encourage them to pursue their goals, it’s worth remembering: They need more than your words.
Workplace Coaching: What the Heck Does this Mean?
on Monday, March 23, 2020
In a recent Coaching workshop a participant kept asking, “Isn’t coaching just some trendy buzzword that can really mean a lot of different things?”
The Business Case for Developing Emotional Intelligence
on Monday, December 9, 2019
Does your workplace see empathy and sensitivity as a strength or a weakness? Our experience is that workplaces send clear messages, intentionally or unintentionally, about the importance of developing these skills.
Lack of Training Equals a Lack of Trust for Managers
on Monday, June 10, 2019
Gallup’s Q12, a twelve question survey administered to employees to measure engagement, has been around since 1996. Since that time tens of millions of employees from 195 countries have taken it. Every single question focuses on managerial or team soft skills rather than salary or benefits.
Spring is here! Time to Clean and Organize – HR Style
on Monday, May 20, 2019
Spring brings us sunshine and rain, which also brings us lots of flowers and plants growing all around us. While beautiful, it also means it’s allergy season! What better time to stay indoors with filtered air and get some organizational items ...
Nudging in the Workplace – Positive Invitations for Change
on Monday, May 13, 2019
Nudges are a small feature in the environment that attracts our attention and influences our behavior. Nudges are everywhere.
Change and Transition: Still One of the Biggest Challenges for Leaders
on Monday, April 8, 2019
“After all this time as a manager you would think I would be better at managing transition. After all, I have been through about a million changes.”
Sources of Leadership Power – Are You Using the Right One?
on Monday, March 11, 2019
One of my favorite concepts regarding leadership development is about the interrelated concept of power. Leadership and power go hand in hand.
Blind Spots, Heuristics and Anchors … Oh My!
on Monday, January 7, 2019
Resolve this year to improve the quality and effectiveness of your workplace conversations by challenging everything. Well, don’t challenge everything. That would take too long. But it may really pay off to work with your supervisory team to improve critical thinking.
Workplace Coaching: High Return on Investment for Those Willing to Dig In
on Monday, December 10, 2018
I was working with a group of new supervisors last month and reviewing this thing we call coaching. I asked them to reflect on their willingness to dig in to the coaching role.
How to Build Your Leadership Pipeline
on Monday, September 10, 2018
According to a brand new EZ survey of 402 CEOs from 11 countries, together running companies worth $2.6 trillion in sales, 68% felt they were not fully prepared for their leadership position.
Become the Engaged Leader Your Organization Needs
on Monday, February 12, 2018
Engaged leaders are the key drivers of initiatives that ensure the “people programs” in a company support and contribute to the mission and strategic objectives of the organization.
What to Do When Feedback is Met With Defensiveness
on Tuesday, December 12, 2017
It’s hard enough for many of us to summon the nerve to provide someone with constructive feedback. Ideally we’ve done some work preparing for the conversation: we’ve thought about a way to convey that we mean well from the start, we’ve identified the specific issue in question (rather than focusing on someone’s personality), and we know how to articulate our expectation for that person moving forward.
Succession Planning: Getting it Right
on Monday, June 19, 2017
Though most of us associate succession planning with only the highest levels of leadership, identifying and developing new leaders is paramount at all levels of the organization.
Leadership & Self-Fulfilling Prophecies: Are You Selling Your People Short?
on Monday, January 16, 2017
Perhaps you’ve never heard of the Pygmalion Effect, but you probably have seen it in action. Essentially, it is a self-fulfilling prophecy whereby higher expectations lead to increased performance.
Happiness Is a Serious Problem
on Monday, November 28, 2016
In his program “Happiness is a Serious Problem,” Dennis Prager shares three keys to happiness.
Are You a Bad Manager?
on Monday, October 24, 2016
Having a bad manager can make a great job terrible. The problem is that some managers were never taught the right way to manage people.
The Right Approach to Conflict
on Monday, September 19, 2016
There are five primary approaches to dealing with conflict: 1) Authority, 2) Compromise, 3) Avoidance, 4) Accommodation, and 5) Collaboration. Many people are comfortable with a few of these approaches but not with all five. If you misuse, overuse or under-use any of the five, you take a risk the conflict will become worse.
Creative Ways to Use Six Thinking Hats
on Monday, May 23, 2016
Many times meetings to discuss plans and change are poorly facilitated. Participants sometimes don’t share their concerns, or contradict each other and don’t commit to action.
Extraordinary Groups
on Monday, March 28, 2016
Would you like to build a spectacular team? One great place to start is to uncover positive memories of your potential team members.
The Question: An Overlooked and Undervalued Leadership Tool
on Monday, March 14, 2016
Once again, what we learned in early education is relevant to gaining insight in our leadership style. The four sentence types – declarative, interrogative, imperative and exclamatory – and how you use them reveal much about your leadership competency.
A Leader Who Cared – A True Story
on Monday, February 22, 2016
Arnie (names changed) dragged his Arkansas accent down the Oregon Coast to become a boat builder at Freeman Marine. His coworkers appreciated his hard work but thought him naïve.
Ethical Leadership: The Learning Approach
on Monday, September 21, 2015
Do you want to be an ethical leader? First, relax. Being ethical shouldn’t require moral self-righteousness, rigid standards, covering up that we aren’t perfect, or even always following the rules. Bureaucrats follow rules, but ignore the spirit behind the rules. Ethical people try to find the best thing to do, given the limits of their perspective. We don’t know the long-term ramifications of each ethical act, but we try our best to take the long view.
Grading Your Training – Part 2
on Monday, July 20, 2015
In the last blog I emphasized that for training to gain traction it takes management support both before and after, and the trainer’s connection well before the event. So how do we get trainees to commit to any change suggested in the training content?
Items 31-60 of 64
Got Workplace Silos? Develop Your Leadership Skills
Silos may be a natural and predictable phenomenon with work groups. They are certainly common. Are they always a bad thing? Probably not. When speaking of silos, typically workplaces are referring to the “I-am-only-interested-in-my-group” dynamics that occur between day shift and swing shift, or between sales and production, between administration and front-line service. Information isn’t shared, resources are hoarded, barriers are erected and business suffers.
Supervisor Development—High Return on Investment for Those Willing to Dig In
The Communication Conundrum
For years we have been teaching supervisors, managers and team leaders to over-communicate to their teams. We would encourage leaders to articulate with effective repetition our vision, rallying cries, day-to-day policy and procedure updates, team priorities, staffing changes.
Creating Necessity and Enjoying Urgency
We shouldn’t create “false urgency,” employees see through that quickly. However, strong teams have a bias for action, for diving in, for making progress and mistakes that move us ahead.
Managing Through Change and Disruption
As consultants to workplaces across the Northwest, Cascade Employers Association has been helping workplaces adjust to change for decades.
COVID Advice Syndrome
I don’t know about you, but in the past few weeks I have received about a ton and a half of advice about how to cope with all the change and stressors that have hit us recently. To be honest, I am also guilty of adding to the advice pile.
Are You Using Collaboration Effectively?
Before you say you believe in someone, before you encourage them to pursue their goals, it’s worth remembering: They need more than your words.
Workplace Coaching: What the Heck Does this Mean?
In a recent Coaching workshop a participant kept asking, “Isn’t coaching just some trendy buzzword that can really mean a lot of different things?”
The Business Case for Developing Emotional Intelligence
Does your workplace see empathy and sensitivity as a strength or a weakness? Our experience is that workplaces send clear messages, intentionally or unintentionally, about the importance of developing these skills.
Lack of Training Equals a Lack of Trust for Managers
Gallup’s Q12, a twelve question survey administered to employees to measure engagement, has been around since 1996. Since that time tens of millions of employees from 195 countries have taken it. Every single question focuses on managerial or team soft skills rather than salary or benefits.
Spring is here! Time to Clean and Organize – HR Style
Nudging in the Workplace – Positive Invitations for Change
Nudges are a small feature in the environment that attracts our attention and influences our behavior. Nudges are everywhere.
Change and Transition: Still One of the Biggest Challenges for Leaders
“After all this time as a manager you would think I would be better at managing transition. After all, I have been through about a million changes.”
Sources of Leadership Power – Are You Using the Right One?
One of my favorite concepts regarding leadership development is about the interrelated concept of power. Leadership and power go hand in hand.
Blind Spots, Heuristics and Anchors … Oh My!
Resolve this year to improve the quality and effectiveness of your workplace conversations by challenging everything. Well, don’t challenge everything. That would take too long. But it may really pay off to work with your supervisory team to improve critical thinking.
Workplace Coaching: High Return on Investment for Those Willing to Dig In
I was working with a group of new supervisors last month and reviewing this thing we call coaching. I asked them to reflect on their willingness to dig in to the coaching role.
How to Build Your Leadership Pipeline
According to a brand new EZ survey of 402 CEOs from 11 countries, together running companies worth $2.6 trillion in sales, 68% felt they were not fully prepared for their leadership position.
Become the Engaged Leader Your Organization Needs
Engaged leaders are the key drivers of initiatives that ensure the “people programs” in a company support and contribute to the mission and strategic objectives of the organization.
What to Do When Feedback is Met With Defensiveness
It’s hard enough for many of us to summon the nerve to provide someone with constructive feedback. Ideally we’ve done some work preparing for the conversation: we’ve thought about a way to convey that we mean well from the start, we’ve identified the specific issue in question (rather than focusing on someone’s personality), and we know how to articulate our expectation for that person moving forward.
Succession Planning: Getting it Right
Though most of us associate succession planning with only the highest levels of leadership, identifying and developing new leaders is paramount at all levels of the organization.
Leadership & Self-Fulfilling Prophecies: Are You Selling Your People Short?
Perhaps you’ve never heard of the Pygmalion Effect, but you probably have seen it in action. Essentially, it is a self-fulfilling prophecy whereby higher expectations lead to increased performance.
Happiness Is a Serious Problem
In his program “Happiness is a Serious Problem,” Dennis Prager shares three keys to happiness.
Are You a Bad Manager?
Having a bad manager can make a great job terrible. The problem is that some managers were never taught the right way to manage people.
The Right Approach to Conflict
There are five primary approaches to dealing with conflict: 1) Authority, 2) Compromise, 3) Avoidance, 4) Accommodation, and 5) Collaboration. Many people are comfortable with a few of these approaches but not with all five. If you misuse, overuse or under-use any of the five, you take a risk the conflict will become worse.
Creative Ways to Use Six Thinking Hats
Many times meetings to discuss plans and change are poorly facilitated. Participants sometimes don’t share their concerns, or contradict each other and don’t commit to action.
Extraordinary Groups
Would you like to build a spectacular team? One great place to start is to uncover positive memories of your potential team members.
The Question: An Overlooked and Undervalued Leadership Tool
Once again, what we learned in early education is relevant to gaining insight in our leadership style. The four sentence types – declarative, interrogative, imperative and exclamatory – and how you use them reveal much about your leadership competency.
A Leader Who Cared – A True Story
Arnie (names changed) dragged his Arkansas accent down the Oregon Coast to become a boat builder at Freeman Marine. His coworkers appreciated his hard work but thought him naïve.
Ethical Leadership: The Learning Approach
Do you want to be an ethical leader? First, relax. Being ethical shouldn’t require moral self-righteousness, rigid standards, covering up that we aren’t perfect, or even always following the rules. Bureaucrats follow rules, but ignore the spirit behind the rules. Ethical people try to find the best thing to do, given the limits of their perspective. We don’t know the long-term ramifications of each ethical act, but we try our best to take the long view.
Grading Your Training – Part 2
In the last blog I emphasized that for training to gain traction it takes management support both before and after, and the trainer’s connection well before the event. So how do we get trainees to commit to any change suggested in the training content?
